Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 28 Jul 1938, 2, p. 1

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-.--”â€"..â€"-1 M mumsesm # comuns if i) commme U t t $ % W W ® W w U M mss to t usmm W % Wt Toronto â€" Star:â€" wormâ€"insect,. no, no but a worm with legs. As to hollow sect has clearly gt If man had hollow Legion next m announc legs. As to hollow legs, the wormâ€"inâ€" sect has clearly got somwthing there, If man had hollow legs, look what he could carry in them without pnitting bulges in his pockets as at present. And there would be no such thing as boctlegging, just plain legging. Visiting membe exâ€"servicemen M ns 0 th Nh t Langdon Langdon Building Plans Estimates, Etc. Old P.0O. Bildg., Timmins â€" Phone 362 ARCHITECT 7 Reed Block f Timmins Arch.Gillies,B.A.8c.,0.L.S. Ewiss Watchmaker Graduate of the Famous Horological Institute of Switzerland Third Avenue Basement Reed Block, Timmins Service Satisfaction Sanitation 14 Third Avenue Timmins, Ont As well as rheumatism and lumâ€" bego develops from uric acid leftâ€" in the blood by defective kidneys. Lasting relief comes when the liver, _ DB. CHASE‘S Kidgvneyvâ€"Liver Pills action by Timmins Branch 88 Canadian Legion DEAN KESTER, K.C. CHARLES H. KERR Barrister We Manufacture and Carry in Stock A WNINGS Reference Bchumacher High School and many others on request. Aak Your Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries 4 MARSHALLâ€"ECCLESTONE BUILDING Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Bank of Commerce Building Timmins, Ont. J. Turner Sons, Ltd. PETERBOROUGH, ONT. Agents Everywhere FLAGS _ BAQG i3 HAVERSACKS EIDERDOW N SNOWSHOES ROBES DOG SLEIGHS SKIIS TOBOGGANS DOG HARNESS TARPAULINS HORSE TENTS BLANKETS D. R. Franklin BARRISTERSâ€"ATâ€"LAW AVOCATS ETâ€"NOTAIRE3 rresidentâ€"Walter Greaves Barristers, Rolicitors, Ete MASSEY BLOCK Ti MMINXS®, OQONT. and South Porcupine D. Pagquette, propr«bor THREE RBARBERS IN ATTENDANCE Ontario Land Surveyor Over Pierce Hardware YÂ¥ Local Dealer for Prices or send your order direct to Hall etin ed 1: Second Section er Solicitor McINNIS BLOCK 1€ 1COuUrCcIiIgere Money to Loan Taylor, LL.B. . CALDBICK Phone 1365 Architect the bran«( PACK BAGS Empire Rlock Timmins Phone 1580 Notary Timmins Ontario ~14â€"26 ha ~14â€"26 â€"14â€"28 ‘Cash Box Containing $533 Stolen from Mathias Goulet During Party. Son Denies Guilt and Is Given Benefit of Doubt. Majority of Important Cases Remanded to Next Week, Traffic Charges Unnecessary blowing of auto horns ‘cmt Lawrence Desjardins and Maurice lRoy $5 and costs each. Patrick Paquin I was fined $10 and costs on a charge of reckless driving. On a similar charge, arising out of a crash that deâ€" stroyed the wagon of a local Chinese gardener and injured one of his horses !so badly that it had to be killed, John D. Brennan, of Thedford Mines, was also fined $10 and costs. Several other small fines were imposed for minor inâ€" fractions of the traffic act. "I am definitely suspicious of the acâ€" cused but the evidence is so conflicting that I will have to give him the benefit of the doubt," said Magistrate Gould in police cclurt here on Tuesday afterâ€" noon when he dismissed a charge against Omer Goulet of stealing a cash box containing $533, the property of his aged father. Various witnesses, all relatives of the accused, related the details of a party held at the home of Mathias Goulet, the father, on the night the cash box was found missing. Their stories failâ€" ed to coincide on many of the details but a brother and nephew of the acâ€" cused testified that they saw him takâ€" ing the cash box out the door under his arm. had sold out and refuted the stateâ€" ment of his brother that he had told him to mind his own business as he loft his father‘s house with the cash box under his arm. Cases Are Remanded The majority of the more important cases on the docket were adjourned unâ€" til next week. Keeping for sale counts against Bert Hazlewood and Albert Loisall, of Ogden Township, laid by Provincial Police, were remanded until August 2. Doris Desrosiers, charged with keeping a disorderly house, is on bail of $500 to appear next week. CGGeorgina Delorme, charged as an inâ€" ma‘» and also on a second count of At the request of his counsel, Dean Kestor, K.C., a charge of theft of gold from the Hollinger mine against Richâ€" ard Gonzales was also adjourned. His wife provided bail of $100 cash. Other charges. adjourned for.a.â€"weckâ€"included a charge of indecent exposure against H. Bergeron and two local charges of keeping liquor for sale. Excise Charge Mik» Verbanoff, of Godfrey Townâ€" ship, who pleaded guilty to a charge of possession of illicit spirits, contrary to the provisions of the Excise Act, paid a fine of $100 and costs. Fined for Assault Found guilty of assaulting Thomas Lepine, Kirika Ykrainec was fined $10 and costs. A similar charge preferred by a wife against her husband was withdrawn. Drunks Are Sentenced Roy Saunders and Edward McEvoy, convicted on charges of second offence intoxication were each ordered to pay $50 and costs or serve thirty days. Jack Hanrahan got the same medicine for permitting drunkenness in his house. Five ordinary drunks were assessed the usual $10 and costs. When his comâ€" panion, Edward McEvoy, admitted ownership, a charge of illegal possession of win»> against Omer Chenier was disâ€" missed. This was who said he taken homse of the party The money, Aallegedly stolen, was part of the proceeds of the sale of the faâ€" thor‘s garage business. The son denied that ho was even aware that his father sbstructing police, had her bail set at $500 property, with two sureties of $250 each. She has been in custody since the date of her arrest, July 20. Dismiss Son on Charge of Robbing His Father Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"Even in his home on the island of Illiec off the coast eof France, Colonel and Mrs. Charles Lindberg do not seem to be safe from gangsters. Because of threats the colonel has received, guards on the island are watching all boats that leave the mainland for the island. The colonel and his family moved to his recently purchased island home from the estate they occupied near London. Published at Timmins, Ont., Canada Every MONDAY and THURSDAY The flatly denied by Goulet, was drunk and had been at ten o‘clock the night Sudbury Star:â€"If victorious, China would be the first in our time to win by having more targets than bullets, an observer comments. The others in the crew were not inâ€" JjJured seriously. The men were digging at the bottom of the shaft when the sides suddenly fell in above them and tons of rock and dirt crashed down upâ€" on them. Hoggard and Myers were killed instantly. The others struggled free from the debris of the caveâ€"in and were aided to the surface. Val d‘Or, ajue., July 27.â€"The sides of a 30â€"ft. shaft at the Perron Gold Mines collapsed on Monday and two men were killed and several others were injured. The men were members of the crew sinking a new shaft at the Perron Mine. The men who met death in the accident were J. Myers, 28, and E. Hoggard, 32. The crushed body of Hoggard was recovered immediately, but that of Myers remained buried unâ€" der tons of rock. Roger Taschereau, provincial mines inspector, directed work of a rescue crew digging for Myers‘ body. T‘wo Men Killed in Mine Acceirdent at Perron Mine SUMMER DRESSES During Sale Strictly Cash sSEEâ€"QOUR RACK OF Any Dress in our Store including Light and Dark colours, also a Few Evening Dresses at It pays to buy better Dresses, as nothing quite takes the place of Quality. DRESSES GOSSARD CORSETS TIMMINS, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JUL‘Y 28TH 1938 ommencing Friday, July 29th Clearing Lines KNITTED SUITS AND SWEATERS ALSO CLEAPING AT HALF PRICE Exceptional Values Here in Most Sizes. Rinn Bros. 13 Pine Street North, Timmins The parasites are flies of two types. One specimen lays eggs on the back of the worm, and the hatchlings destroy Haileybury, July 28.â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"Residents of the Quebec side of Lake Temiskaming in town this week on business told a story of a girl of the Ville Marie district having been attacked by a bear while she was out berry picking, and of being injured by the animal, although apparently sufâ€" fering nothing more serious than some scratches. The girl‘s name was given as Miss Jules, grownâ€"up daughter: of Mr. and Mrs. Moise Jules, and it was stated she and her sister were engaged in picking blueberries when they came unexpectedly across a bear similarly enâ€" gaged. One of the girls got too close to bruin and alarmed him, whereupon the animal struck the girl a blow on the head with a paw and also scratched her on the back before she could get away in safety. In Brant County the worm‘s menace is practically at an end due to paraâ€" sites, it is reported. Parasites Killing the Army Worm Now Parasites are helping man in his fight against the army worm and hope is held that it will be routed soon. Ville Marie Girl] Attacked by Bear Girl Slighty Injured by Bear While Berryâ€"Picking. The other stings the worm and lays ail Purses See Our Clearing Lines at $1.00 irses Blouses Skin Sweaters, Etc. at Aft>r an inspection of farms in the vicinity of London, Agricultural Reâ€" ; presentative W. K. Riddell expressed | the hope that the peak of the army | worm invasion had passed. Although parasites are killing worms by thousands in Brant and other counâ€" ties near Brantford, farm lands in the Ayr district in South Dumfries and Onondagza have suffered considerable damagze. $1.95 At Peterborough, Agricultural Reâ€" presentative Frank Paterson asked farmers to inspect their fields for any sign of the worm. He said no comâ€" plaints of a serious nature had been reported, although he advised taking every precaution against the pest. Considerable damage to crops is reâ€" ported from the Green Lane section near Hawkesbury. Worms have also made their way to Glengarry County, south of there. eggs inside, the larvae killing it after hatching. It is said that the parasites travel from place to place like the army worm, following more or less in the track of the pest, so that what is happening in the South will soon be duplicated in the Louis Lee Committed On Charge Of Murder Held in Custody in Connection With Shooting of Harold Johnston at Hooker Creek in Bowman Township. Witâ€" nesses Say Killing Result of Jealousy Concerning Johnâ€" ston and Lee‘s Daughter. Nice Dresses Not Price Dresses Skirts ‘ublished at Timmins, Ont.. Canada Every MONDAY and THURSDAY Recounting the incidents leading up to the shooting, Gerald Johnston, broâ€" ther of the victim, told the court that Johinston, his mother and Lee‘s daugh~â€"| ter had left the farm that afternoon,| the younger woman going to Matheson to see her husband. ~When the trio returned that evening in Johnston‘s| truck, he and another young lad, George Bennett, were inside the Johnâ€" ston house. Called outside by his mother, he saw Lee running to hisl house nearby, declaring that he was going to get a gun. A few minutes later Ler emerged from his house carrying The shooting, according to two of the witnesses heard, was the result of a jeéealous objection by Lee to Johnston‘s attentions to his eighteenâ€"yearâ€"old married daughter, a bride of three months, whose husband is confined to hospital in Matheson. Lee is the father of ten children, while Johnston, also a married man, leaves a wife and family of three. Charged with murder in connection with the fatal shooting of his neighâ€" bolur, Harold Johnston, on the night of July 18, Louis Henry Llee, settlerâ€" farmer residing at Hooker Creek in Bowman Township near Matheson, was committed for trial here on Tuesday afternoon by Magistrate M. G. Gould, of North Bay. Lee, who is represented by Dean Kester K.C., was not asked to elect or plead to the charge. a 30.30 carbine rifle. Jumping over the fence, the accused fired from the hip from a distance of about twentyâ€" five feet and hit Johnston just as the latter was about to enter the back door of his mother‘s house. Seeing his broâ€" ther crumple in a heap the younger Johnston ran toward the road accomâ€" panied by the Bennett youth. Lee is alleged to have fired three shots after them but none of the bullets found their mark. Under cross examination by Mr. Kesâ€" ter, Johnston repeated that jealousy was the cause of the shooting. He tesâ€" tified that on the day of the killing his mother and brother had gone to Kirkland Lake, Mrs, McMayne going as far as Matheson to see her husband. In reply to a question by defeonce counâ€" sel, he swore that as far as he knew his brother had not been going out with Mrs. McMayne. He admitted however that he had driven her to Matheson quite frequently in the preâ€" vious five weeks. c n n o. ds t : Pn encb s Chief Coroner E. R. TUCK@T, Of COCH â€" | mm ttt mm t i ooo t t womee t t 1 mm § § mm t en rane, who was the first person in au-i Consolidate your debts by assigning thority to reach the scene of the killâ€"|| a portion of your income to E. C. ing, told of approaching the Lee house! Brewer â€" for distylbution to your where the accused had previously | creditors, threatened anyone who attempted to C BREWER approach, Walking up a ditch that Eo e afforded some protection he got near|| Office Room 6 Gordon Block the awelling and CAll@Q tO _ | * n smm t mm 183 mc t B 8 memmone t mm 8 h ommfi cce( 8 ce t cce t i ons he convinced him that he was not Provincial Constable White, he walked| death was almost instantaneous, the up on the verandah and recovered the| doctor said. rifle from Lee that had allegedly beenl Throughout the entire proceedings used in the shooting. Lee agreed to| Lee gave no outward sign of emotion come to Matheson and give himself | but occasionally bowed his head as the up but on the road the coroner was met|evidence was unfolded. He will apâ€" by Constable Simpson, of Kirkland|pear at the supreme court assizes to Lake, who placed Lee under arrest.| be held in Cochrane next fall. The accused kept muttering incoherâ€" ently after being subdued by the corâ€"| Huntingdon Gleaner:â€"A barber namâ€" oner. ‘"I‘d like to finish the whole|ed Tennyson down in Cushing, Okla., dam tunch," was one of his comments,| got himself into trouble because he Mr. Tucker said. sought to do a good turn to two transiâ€" Pr. C. Smylie, of Matheson, gave the | ents needing haircuts. They had only cause of Johnston‘s death as a fracâ€" i a quarter apiece so the barber cut their tured spine, laceration of the spinal| hair for that and was arrested and is cord, h>morrhages and shock. The bulâ€"| facing a fine and probably a jail sentâ€" let entered the victim‘s back, tore ence for violating a state law which through one lung and emerged on his':-ays barbers cannot charge less than right side near the top of the ribs. His 40 cents for a haircut. By WALLY BISHOP ..â€"..â€"..â€"-‘.â€"..â€"QIâ€"G.UUIâ€"'I Throughout the entire proceedings Lee gave no outward sign of emotion but occasionally bowed his head as the evidence was unfolded. He will apâ€" pear at the supreme court assizes to be held in Cochrane next fall. Gordon Block Dr. S. R. Harrison 4 Gordon Block Phone 1615 Timmins Dr. Ray Hughes Chiropractor and Electro Therapist CONsSULTATION FREE Diseases Peculiar to Women Phone 1565 SPECIALIST Diseases of Children Officeâ€"2 to 5 p.m. Phone 2025 and by appointment. 20205B Corner of Pine and Fourth Empire Block _ Timmins 14â€"206 Crtdit Reports Collections Accounting and Auditing 6 Balsam Street North, Timmins Phones 270â€"228 P.O. Box 1747 ~39â€"2 56 Tamarack St., Miss Dorothy Dodge by Day or Night, or part time, by Graduate Registered Nurse. (Woman Doctor) With years of experience in the Orient and in Ontario is now engagâ€" ing in general practice to both male and female. Special attention given to women‘s diseases. 22 First Ave. Phone 1230 Timmins Consolidate your debts by assigning a portion of your income to E. C. Brewer for distribution to your creditors, DR. W. GORDO 0. E. Kristenson CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 60 THIRD AVENUE Phone 640 DR. E. L. ROBERTS CHIROPRACTOR Xâ€"RAY NEUROCALOMETER Bank of Commerce Building PHONE 607 Dental Surgeon DR. MOORE‘S BUILDING Dr. Olive Rea Wease PECIALIST Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 09 ce an_pnâ€"-u.â€".nâ€"-npâ€".nâ€"auâ€".aâ€"â€"naâ€"- Single Copy Five Cents Corporation Ltd. 3 Pine N., Timmins Phone 466 omm * $ cesmm i $ i j #1 csmm Timmins, Ont. »17â€"43p Timmins, Ont. Phone 2030 Timmins Collections Timmins

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